Pine Plains irons out land issue

PINE PLAINS — The status of the little sliver of land in the middle of town, at the intersection of routes 199 and 82, was recently in limbo. The issue was raised at the latest Town Board meeting on Thursday, July 16. There was talk of the state wanting to give the town $100 for the land, but ambiguity at the time as to why.

Since then town Supervisor Brian Coons has clarified the issue.

“The state is not giving money for the land, the money is for a permit we have given them on a project that closed long before I was in office,” he said. “They owed us $100, so it’s payback for that. We had a misinterpretation on what the money was for [at the July Town Board meeting].”

The New York State Department of Transportation (DOT) had sketched out an agreement of adjustment for the property.

“We have to pass a resolution for that to get money back from [the state],” Coons said at the board meeting. “The town of Pine Plains is to execute an agreement and any subsequent paperwork.”

Coons clarified that the town “is not selling them that piece of land.” Rather, he said, “the town owns the land — the state was going to put in a crosswalk, a handicap-accessible crosswalk or something like that. They were going to get a right of way [but didn’t]. Either way, the town owns the land.

“The title has not been transferred and we are not transferring the title,” he said. “So compensation is to be paid by the state. Nothing has happened.”

“I don’t understand why they are giving us money,” said Councilman Gary Cooper at the meeting. “We never paid for anything.”

“I’ll call them,” said Coons.

And he did. That’s when Coons confirmed that the state owes the town $100.

“That’s why people are like, ‘What are they buying from us?’ They’re not buying anything from us,” he said, adding the matter turned out to be simpler than originally thought.

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